Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 8 January 1959 — Page 9
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1959
Predicts Budget To Be Over $1 Billion Predictions Listed By Veteran Writer By EUGENE J. CADOU United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Covering every session of the Indiana General Assembly for the past 34 years may entitle the writer to look into the crystal ball, get out on the traditional limb and stick out his scrawny neck with predictions about the 91st session of that body. At any rat?, I predict:
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| —The biennial budget will remain above the billion - dollar mark, what with the usual victory of the teachers’ lobby for higher school allowances and big highway appropriations. —Lt. Gov. Crawford F. Parker and State Sen. Matthew E. Welsh will handle themselves so shrewdly during the session that they will be the inside track men for the Republican and Democratic gubernatorial nominations, respectively, in 1960. —The “right to work” law will be repealed, chiefly because it has become a political liability; supplemental unemployment compensation will be legalized, and there will be slightly higher jobless and workmen's compensation payments.
No Skip Election' —There will be no skip-election law because a number of the 1 more respdfcsible Democratic i mayors have lined up against it : and because it is such a palpable i fraud on the electorate by adding one year to the terms of mayors . elected for a- specific-four — year term. ■ ~ . ‘ i —The parimutuel race betting legislation will be defeated with the votes of most Republicans and . many conservative Democrats and , the opposition of Governor Han- , dley to legalized gambling. —The taverns will npt be permitted to stay open any longer : than the present midnight, slow time, closing hour. —Reapportionment will make its 1 greatest progress in history and
THE DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
the result may be election of House members on a population basis and senators under a geographical system—the so - called federal plan, advocated by Governor Handley. —The agile lobby of the four state universities will dissipate the scare of whittled appropriations for those institutions. —Jim Nicholas, probably the smartest lobbyist in the state, will be able to defeat any bills that embarrass the trucking industry. —The powerful Democratic majority of the House will prevent repeal of the railroad fullcrew law, although railroad officials says its featherbedding is breaking their backs.
Fight Highway Csar —There wil| be at least one bill to create a one-man highway director with elimination of full time for the present personnel of the State Highway Commission and the reduction of their powers to those of an advisory nature. Governor Handley and the entire Republican state organization will fight this measure fiercely because the highway department teems with political patronage. —The governor also will swing his ax against any attempt to strip him of control of the patron-age-potent automobile license bureaus, but a pious home - rule measure to transfer them to county officials has a bare chance. —A rather conservative Democratic leadership in both houses
will forestall enactment of expensive social and welfare bills. —A proposal to put teeth into the Fair Employment Practices Law will gather dust in some care-fully-chosen committee. —The direct primary proponents will throw a scare into the old-time politicians' favoring the state conventin with the latter group probably prevailing in the end. Sees Compromise Laws —The legislators, as usual, will dilly-dally on the important bills until the last week of the session and then adopt, hit-or-miss compromise legislation. —Hungry residents of a number of cities on Lake Michigan will try to divert the two million dollar appropriation for die Burns
' «/ • y - J .I ■ /ik. « ■ -I. j j z *». UK® I |L jH | . MF nMF SI -■-$ -a*>-•»'■■ *•..■■ RUSSIA TAKES A SHOT AT THE MOON-A Soviet scientist open- ] ates a huge telescope at the Academy of Sciences in the Crimea after Russia launched a 3,245.7-pound rocket to the moon. Moscow reported that the missile contained three radio transmitters and was designed to form an artificial .•omet visjfile for five minutes as it raced toward its terget.
Ditch Hajbor, a nebulous enterprise which seems„ away. ' ‘ —Lawyers will try cases, insurance men. will,, sell policies, realtors will cry their wares and other solons will pursue their private interests on the floors of the two houses. —lndianapolis ministers, waiting to deliver opening prayers, win lose many precious hours waiting for the two houses to convene because lawmakers are too fatigued from lobby poctural parties to appear on time.
Alcoholism Purely A Disease Os Mind Experienced Doctor Disputes Suspicion By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor __ NEW YORK tUPD—A physician widely experienced with alcoholics disputes the growing scientific suspicion that there is no such thing as "the alcoholic personality.’’ There is such a personality, said Dr. Robert I. Levy, but you can get confused by it taking a number of forms. This is no small matter, in the view of mind scientists. To them, the disease, alcoholism, is purely a disease of the mind, and if science ever gives tip on efforts to blue-print “the alcoholic personality,” there may never be a solution for this affliction of more and more people. But some scientists have already given up. One said caustically that the only thing alcoholics had in common was that they all drank too much. Another remarked it was possible to find just about anything you wanted to find in any group of alcoholics. Unconscious Needs Levy said the place to begin describing the structure of "the alcoholic personality” was at its foundation stones beneath the surface, and not with any of the weird personality patterns which could be erected on those foundation stones. Those stones are unconscious needs, according to Levy. If those needs are ■of great intensity and if alcohol seems to lessen the problems which grow out of the needs, then you have the base of “the alcoholic personality.” One set of needs, he continued, are masochistic and they are "the major determinant of much pathological drinking." "Overtly, alcohol ‘punishes’ in a -variety of ways,” he said. "There is the simple hangover. There is the binge with its miserable days and weeks of resulting sickness. There are the lost jobs, the prom-
■ IF ' -w ' ' Oil » -it ‘’ W 1 I V HELD IN St AYING—John T. Cavanagh, 32, arrives at police headquarters in Miami, Fla, after his arrest in connection with the hammer-slaying of his mother in Brooklyn, N. Y. According to police, Cavanagh allegedly admitted striking his , mother, but said he did not realize that she was dead.
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xwimdi. the marr* , ■^- = - Serves As Device "The overt self-punishment, of course, serves unconsciously as a problem-solving device. Our patients commonly show such unconscious mechanisms as, ‘look, I am sick, and only as an invalid am I lovable.’ Or I am sick. This explainswhy Idid not accomplish what’ I wanted to in life, and which I could have-easily accomplished otherwise'.” Another need at the base of the “alcoholic personality” is a need to return to the infant's way of experiencing life. Alcohol makes it seem (unconsciously) that "there is an available bountiful mother floating somewhere just out of sight,"” h.e said. -v-. 'J-
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